Hillary Clinton walks a daily tightrope between attacking Republicans and trumpeting her ability to work with them. Republicans "seem to be very fact averse," she told me in an interview, shortly after saying "I'm interested in us solving problems together."
I met the Democratic presidential candidate in San Antonio, Texas, for a wide-ranging conversation before a campaign fund-raiser at a fancy hotel. We talked about immigration, the private email server she used as secretary of State, Iran, the upcoming Iowa caucuses, and many other subjects. You can dig into the meat of our conversation here.
But the biggest bipartisan embrace she offered was not in the meat. It was in the vegetables. (Ok, technically avocados are a fruit. I don't want to call down the wrath of the fact-checkers here.)
Clinton has said that the way she stays healthy on the campaign trail is by eating fresh jalapeño peppers every day. As our conversation was wrapping up, I asked where she picked up the hot pepper practice. She told me it was during her husband's first presidential campaign in 1992.
"I read an article about the special immune-boosting characteristics of hot peppers," she recalled. "I thought, that's interesting because, you know, campaigning is pretty demanding."
"I'd always liked hot food — Mexican, Indian, Thai — but I started adding hot peppers, and then I got into eating them raw, whereever they weren't really, really too hot," she said, adding with a laugh that the peppers are "maybe ... one of the reasons I'm so healthy and I have so much stamina and endurance out there today."
Clinton said she used to carry a tiny bottle of Tabasco sauce, and but graduated to the "real hard-core hot peppers."
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